London — Now, perhaps we can all understand a bit better what 19 Olympic medals means.

On Tuesday, Michael Phelps won his 19th Olympic medal, as we all knew he would, surpassing Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina as the most decorated Olympian of all-time.

But it was not in the way we might have expected. Already, there had been a fourth place finish and a second. Then, at the Aquatics Centre Tuesday, he came in second again, in the 200-meter butterfly, before (at last) finishing first as anchor of the 4x200 freestyle relay.

Surely, some will find a few of those colors in his new medal collection strange. Before London, Phelps had never had a silver. Coming in second in the 200-meter butterfly – an event he had not lost at a major international competition since 2000 – could seem like a little tarnish on the end of a golden career.

But did you see Chad le Clos’s face when he touched the wall 0.05 seconds ahead of Phelps? Think back for a moment. Wasn’t that Phelps’s face in Beijing? Weren’t those Phelps’s fingertips touching the wall in Beijing?

And there you have the story of these Games – one in some ways far more engrossing than a repeat of Beijing.

Now, we have an inkling of just how hard it is to beat a world that has trained four years toward the sole goal of making you look silly. In 2008, sometimes though sheer force of will, it seemed, Phelps foiled the world. This time, however, it is not just the Michael Phelps Show.

How many toppings?

These Games are different, Phelps has said. He got his sundae in Beijing. Now, it's more a question of "how many toppings I want" – like the Olympic medal record. And that has made for a kinder, gentler Phelps here.

After his silver-medal performance Tuesday, he said: “I got a bit too serious two days ago. So I just got to relax and smile and have fun.”

Two days ago, if you’re counting at home, was Sunday, the day after Phelps finished fourth in the 400-meter individual medley. It was the day he swam in the second leg of the 4x100 relay. And it was also the only time that the Phelps we came to know in Beijing has made an appearance here. For 100 meters, he was the predator again – the well-earned smile of satisfaction replaced by a snarl of wounded pride.

Is it even conceivable that someone would have caught Phelps in the last 25 meters in Beijing, as le Clos did here?

Milorad Cavic can answer that question. That race, it was Phelps's fingertip on the wall first – by 0.01 seconds.

To le Clos, Tuesday was his sundae – his eight-gold-medal moment, the validation of an entire career wrapped into 1 minute and 52.96 seconds.

“Phelps is my hero, and I love the guy,” he said. “To beat him – I can’t believe it. You don’t understand what this means to me. This is the greatest moment of my life.”

All-arounders humbled

This Olympics was supposed to be the golden age of the American all-arounder – the Phelpses and Ryan Lochtes and Missy Franklins who seemed poised to win seven medals a piece. Instead it has been a bumpy return to reality.

It looks like Allison Schmitt. Is anyone aware that the US freestyle swimmer has as many medals as Phelps and is well placed to get another Wednesday?

It looks like Matt Grevers and Nick Thoman, the only two Americans to engineer a gold-silver sweep at these Olympics (in the 100-meter backstroke).

And it looks a lot like Yannick Agnel, the French swimmer who roped Lochte in Sunday’s relay to win gold and then sent tremors through the Aquatic Centre with a nuclear last 50 meters in the 200-meter freestyle Monday – in front of French President François Hollande, no less.

Phelps’s only words to his teammates in the 4x200 relay Tuesday night? “I told them to give me the biggest lead that they could.”

He was facing against Agnel, who finished second and was closing rapidly.

“If I didn’t get a big enough lead, then who knows what would have happened,” Phelps conceded.